Berliner Boersenzeitung - New push for diplomacy as Ukraine urges calm over Russia threat

EUR -
AED 4.037406
AFN 75.20109
ALL 98.84344
AMD 424.208737
ANG 1.97807
AOA 1003.025259
ARS 1071.449246
AUD 1.633958
AWG 1.97995
AZN 1.867239
BAM 1.957668
BBD 2.216105
BDT 131.155179
BGN 1.956411
BHD 0.414235
BIF 3193.318751
BMD 1.099209
BND 1.43136
BOB 7.600219
BRL 6.042788
BSD 1.097543
BTN 92.168807
BWP 14.517724
BYN 3.591307
BYR 21544.498733
BZD 2.212402
CAD 1.499656
CDF 3160.226697
CHF 0.940054
CLF 0.036903
CLP 1018.27389
CNY 7.753276
CNH 7.75198
COP 4632.616832
CRC 570.739539
CUC 1.099209
CUP 29.129042
CVE 110.370341
CZK 25.323585
DJF 195.44565
DKK 7.45671
DOP 66.282659
DZD 146.010575
EGP 53.364955
ERN 16.488137
ETB 131.121554
FJD 2.441679
FKP 0.837113
GBP 0.839362
GEL 3.017342
GGP 0.837113
GHS 17.396525
GIP 0.837113
GMD 75.845483
GNF 9472.9551
GTQ 8.493183
GYD 229.528025
HKD 8.54313
HNL 27.2918
HRK 7.473535
HTG 144.737484
HUF 401.178779
IDR 17207.514194
ILS 4.151998
IMP 0.837113
INR 92.289708
IQD 1437.759162
IRR 46262.965072
ISK 148.513832
JEP 0.837113
JMD 173.534048
JOD 0.778788
JPY 162.511454
KES 141.589215
KGS 93.103918
KHR 4465.241453
KMF 492.775671
KPW 989.287584
KRW 1481.459454
KWD 0.336919
KYD 0.914665
KZT 532.223128
LAK 23967.875679
LBP 98270.606267
LKR 322.027353
LRD 211.83025
LSL 19.106436
LTL 3.245678
LVL 0.664901
LYD 5.233972
MAD 10.784544
MDL 19.28107
MGA 5044.768988
MKD 61.529709
MMK 3570.188341
MNT 3735.112537
MOP 8.780921
MRU 43.442067
MUR 50.860041
MVR 16.873385
MWK 1903.199158
MXN 21.207399
MYR 4.714534
MZN 70.236607
NAD 19.106262
NGN 1779.410625
NIO 40.38818
NOK 11.707429
NPR 147.467406
NZD 1.795609
OMR 0.423217
PAB 1.097543
PEN 4.088721
PGK 4.373134
PHP 62.554343
PKR 304.738279
PLN 4.320496
PYG 8557.128263
QAR 4.000618
RON 4.977771
RSD 117.014123
RUB 105.889947
RWF 1488.60723
SAR 4.12808
SBD 9.100037
SCR 14.96381
SDG 661.176077
SEK 11.360859
SGD 1.432451
SHP 0.837113
SLE 25.113964
SLL 23049.859969
SOS 627.293001
SRD 34.603655
STD 22751.40947
SVC 9.604079
SYP 2761.795818
SZL 19.096052
THB 36.794942
TJS 11.67804
TMT 3.858224
TND 3.37392
TOP 2.574457
TRY 37.681307
TTD 7.443036
TWD 35.425328
TZS 2995.345145
UAH 45.220548
UGX 4033.831664
USD 1.099209
UYU 45.754085
UZS 14021.44628
VEF 3981942.780048
VES 40.663352
VND 27307.10254
VUV 130.500315
WST 3.074997
XAF 656.577685
XAG 0.035241
XAU 0.000417
XCD 2.970668
XDR 0.816472
XOF 656.580674
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.134629
ZAR 19.230092
ZMK 9894.206762
ZMW 29.090633
ZWL 353.944888
  • RBGPF

    60.5200

    60.52

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.87

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    24.57

    -0.53%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    12.95

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    69.62

    -0.11%

  • NGG

    -1.0200

    65.48

    -1.56%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    38.63

    -0.49%

  • BCC

    2.3700

    141.27

    +1.68%

  • BTI

    -0.0900

    35.2

    -0.26%

  • BP

    0.2600

    33.14

    +0.78%

  • CMSD

    -0.0230

    24.79

    -0.09%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    46.04

    -0.54%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.69

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    33.53

    -0.54%

  • JRI

    -0.1000

    13.18

    -0.76%

  • AZN

    -0.6000

    76.87

    -0.78%

New push for diplomacy as Ukraine urges calm over Russia threat
New push for diplomacy as Ukraine urges calm over Russia threat

New push for diplomacy as Ukraine urges calm over Russia threat

Top Pentagon officials on Friday backed a renewed push for diplomacy to avert conflict in Ukraine, after President Volodymyr Zelensky urged Western leaders to avoid stirring "panic" over the Russian troop buildup on his country's borders.

Text size:

In a call that lasted more than an hour, French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian leader Vladimir Putin likewise agreed on the need for de-escalation, with Putin saying he had "no offensive plans", according to a Macron aide.

At the Pentagon top officials urged a focus on diplomacy while saying that Russia now had enough troops and equipment in place to threaten the whole of Ukraine.

Any such conflict, warned the top US general, Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley, would be "horrific" for both sides.

"If that was unleashed on Ukraine, it would be significant, very significant, and it would result in a significant amount of casualties," Milley said.

"And you can imagine what that might look like in dense urban areas, along roads and so on and so forth. It would be horrific, it will be terrible," he said.

Neither Putin nor his Western counterparts have until now appeared ready to give ground in the weeks-long crisis, the worst in decades in the region between Russia and Western Europe.

But speaking alongside Milley, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said war in Ukraine could still be avoided.

"Conflict is not inevitable. There is still time and space for diplomacy," said Austin.

During his talks with Macron, Putin "expressed no offensive plans and said he wanted to continue the talks with France and our allies," an aide to the French president said.

Their conversation "enabled us to agree on the need for a de-escalation," the aide told journalists. Putin "said very clearly that he did not want confrontation."

- Complex threat -

Since October Russia has amassed more than 100,000 combat troops and equipment, and support forces, along its frontier with Ukraine and more recently in Belarus, which borders Ukraine on the north.

Western officials say Russia has also mustered more air and sea assets in the region, creating a complex threat like none seen since the Cold War.

Moscow has demanded wide-ranging security guarantees from the West, including that Ukraine never be allowed to join NATO.

Those demands have been the subject of intensive negotiations, with the West warning of far-reaching consequences if diplomacy fails and Russia attacks.

"We don't need this panic," the Ukrainian leader Zelensky told a news conference with foreign media, insisting he wanted to avoid hurting his country's already battered economy.

"There are signals even from respected leaders of states, they just say that tomorrow there will be war. This is panic -- how much does it cost for our state?" he asked.

- Russia's concerns not addressed -

Putin also made clear to Macron during their talks that the written responses from the West to his demands this week had fallen short of Russia's expectations, the Kremlin said.

"The US and NATO responses did not take into account Russia's fundamental concerns including preventing NATO's expansion," Putin said, according to the Kremlin's readout of the call.

He added that the West had ignored the "key question," that no country should strengthen its security at the expense of others, adding Russia would "carefully study" the responses "after which it will decide on further actions".

Russia has also demanded a pullback of NATO forces deployed to Eastern European and ex-Soviet countries that joined the alliance after the Cold War.

In a sign of continued tensions, Russia announced Friday evening it had added several EU officials to a list of people banned from entering the country saying they were responsible for "anti-Russian policies".

- 'Do the right thing' -

The emergence of the top two US military officials to speak on the crisis, after weeks of silence, suggested Washington saw the need to reinforce its message, that a diplomatic solution was possible but that the United States remains committed to defending NATO allies which neighbor Ukraine and Russia.

"Mr. Putin can do the right thing as well," said Austin.

"There is no reason that this situation has to devolve into conflict. He can choose to de-escalate. He can order his troops away," he said.

The Putin-Macron phone call followed talks in Paris this week between Russia and Ukraine, with France and Germany alongside, which produced a joint statement to preserve a ceasefire in eastern Ukraine between government forces and pro-Moscow separatists.

They also agreed to hold new talks in Berlin in February.

"Taking into account the results of the meeting" in Paris, the Kremlin said, "the mood for further work of Russia and France in this format was confirmed."

- Threat to key pipeline -

Washington and Berlin warned that the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, designed to double supplies of Russian natural gas to Germany, was at stake.

US President Joe Biden spoke Thursday by telephone with Zelensky and said the United States was considering economic support after $650 million in military assistance over the past year.

Milley said Russia itself would be hurt by war.

"If Russia chooses to invade Ukraine it will not be cost-free, in terms of casualties or other significant effects," he said.

burs-pmh/ec

(O.Joost--BBZ)